Constellation Gomoku
Place stones on a starlit grid and line up five before the AI does.
Browser games for the gaps in your day — a daily word puzzle, quick arcade hits, plus a daily horoscope and tarot reading. No downloads, no sign-ups. Just tap and play.
Top five
Start with the most polished picks, or open the full game library.
Place stones on a starlit grid and line up five before the AI does.
Turn and step in rhythm to climb the planet as high as you can.
Survive the wave. Choose your power. Try not to die — then come back stronger.
Match three. Harvest the field. 20 stages of farm-fresh fun.
Drop fruit, merge the matching pairs, and grow your way up to the watermelon.
Daily readings — pick your sign or draw your cards. For entertainment. Or read the monthly horoscope for July 2026, the zodiac sign profiles, check zodiac compatibility, and the tarot card meanings.
Pick your zodiac sign and read today's forecast for love, money, and luck.
Draw a 3-card past, present, and future spread from the Rider-Waite Major Arcana.
The bigger picture — this month's forecast for every zodiac sign in one long read.
Pick two signs and see how they match in love, friendship, and work.
One question, one card, one answer — a quick yes-or-no draw when you can't decide.
More games on the way
PlayEye isn't a fixed collection — it's a portal that keeps expanding. Buvlor inc. is actively building new HTML5 games across more genres, and we add each one as soon as it's ready. The five featured games above are our strongest starting points; browse the full game library, or try our daily horoscope and tarot reading. There are more in development.
Want to know when the next game lands? Bookmark this page and check back, or drop us a line at hi@buvlor.com — we love hearing which genres you'd like to see next.
About PlayEye
PlayEye is a game portal for people who like games but don't have an hour to spare. Every title here runs straight in your browser using HTML5 — there's nothing to download, no account to create, and no waiting for a 200 MB install to finish. You open the page, tap a game, and you're playing within seconds, whether you're on a phone on the train or a laptop between meetings.
Our library spans a range of genres and keeps growing. Right now you can play a balance-based casual arcade game, a roguelike defense survivors-like, two match-3 puzzles (a calm tap-and-sort and a swap-and-cascade board), a slow-burn idle clicker, a satisfying fruit-merge puzzle, a one-tap timing arcade game, a fast reflex whack-a-mole, a sharp-eyed color-spotting puzzle, a daily word-guessing game, classic Sudoku, Klondike Solitaire, the arcade staple Snake, a minesweeper-style Mines logic puzzle, a desktop aim trainer for FPS players, and a typing shooter that turns typing practice into a falling-word defense game — and more games are on the way. Rather than flooding the page with hundreds of near-identical clones, we add games we actually enjoy, each one built to be easy to pick up, fair to learn, and satisfying to come back to.
Alongside the games, PlayEye has two things worth a quick daily visit: a daily horoscope for every zodiac sign and a 3-card tarot reading from the Rider-Waite Major Arcana. If a game is what you play on a break, these are the thirty-second ritual you check when you open the page — pick your sign or draw your cards, read today's take, and get on with your day.
PlayEye is made by Buvlor inc., a studio that builds and publishes its own casual games. New titles are added regularly as we finish them, so the portal keeps expanding. No clutter, no dark patterns, no pressure — just games, plus a daily horoscope and tarot, that respect your time.
Why PlayEye
Every game loads in the browser with no install and no sign-up. Tap a title and you're playing within seconds — perfect for the short windows of free time that fill a normal day.
Our games are designed around two-to-fifteen-minute sessions. You can finish a run, clear a stage, or check on your idle planet and then put your phone away — progress is saved, so nothing is lost when life interrupts.
Rather than dumping endless clones, we add games we actually love — arcade, defense, puzzle, idle, and more to come. Every title gets real attention to feel, pacing, and difficulty, and the library keeps growing over time.
PlayEye is mobile-first but plays just as well on a tablet or desktop. There's no app to keep updated and no storage to manage — your phone's browser is all you need.
Browse by genre
Each PlayEye game scratches a different itch. Whether you want a tense survival run, a quiet puzzle, or something to leave ticking in the background, there's a genre here for the mood you're in — and we're adding more all the time.
Quick, reaction-based games you can clear in a couple of minutes. Easy to learn, hard to put down. See The Great Commute.
Survivors-like runs where you draft upgrades on the fly, die, and come back permanently stronger. See Broccoli Defense.
Board-clearing puzzles built around planning and combos — from calm tap-and-sort to swap-and-cascade. See Farm Farm Tile and Farm Match.
Slow-growth incremental games that keep progressing even when you're away. See Planet Clicker.
Drop and combine matching pieces to build toward a bigger goal. See Watermelon Game.
Fast, one-input games that test your sense of timing and your reaction speed. See Stop the Cloud and Whack-a-Mole.
Quiet, sharp-eyed challenges about spotting the detail everyone else misses. See Odd Color Out.
Daily word-guessing brain warm-ups with themes, meaning hints, and shareable scores. See WordPlay.
Pure-deduction brain games solvable by reasoning, not luck — with difficulty levels from gentle to expert. See Sudoku and Mines.
The timeless patience game in your browser with undo, hints, and auto-complete. See Klondike Solitaire.
Pick-up-and-play arcade staples that are all reflex and high score. See Snake.
Desktop mouse-accuracy drills for FPS players — Gridshot, Flick, and Tracking with live stats. See Aim Trainer.
Typing practice with stakes — spell the falling words to shoot them down, with waves, combos, and live WPM. See Typing Shooter.
Daily readings for a thirty-second ritual — a zodiac forecast or a 3-card spread. See Daily Horoscope and Free Tarot Reading.
FAQ
Yes. Every game on PlayEye is free to play in its base form, with no purchase required to start — and the daily horoscope and tarot readings are free too. You can open the site and play or read anything without spending a thing or entering payment details.
No. PlayEye games are HTML5 games that run directly in your web browser. There's nothing to download or install, and no registration or login is required. Just open a game and start playing.
PlayEye is designed mobile-first and works on modern smartphones, tablets, and desktop computers. Any up-to-date browser — such as Chrome, Safari, Edge, or Firefox — will run the games. A stable internet connection is recommended for the best experience.
Most games store your progress locally in your browser, so you can pick up where you left off on the same device. Clearing your browser data or switching devices may reset your progress, since PlayEye does not require an account.
Yes. PlayEye is a growing portal. New HTML5 games are added regularly as Buvlor inc. finishes them, so there's always something fresh to come back for. The games listed today are what's playable now — more are in development.
PlayEye games are casual and family-friendly, with no graphic violence, gambling, or adult content. They're built to be light, approachable, and safe for a general audience.
Some games may introduce optional reward features — such as progress bonuses or in-game challenges — in the future. Any such features will be clearly explained in-game when they launch. For now, the games are simply there to play for fun.
We'd love to hear from you. You can reach us any time at hi@buvlor.com, or visit our Contact page for more details on what to include in your message.
From the blog
The PlayEye blog digs into how our games actually work — the solver behind every winnable Solitaire deal, the generator that guarantees one Sudoku answer, the real timing windows in our reflex games, and which game fits which kind of break. A few recent reads: